Abstract

Diabetic kidney disease (DKD) pathogenesis is multifactorial and is a combination of metabolic, genetic, and environmental factors. Due to a long period of asymptomatic course, it is often diagnosed late when advanced stages of the disease are present. Among patients with diabetes, the presence of chemotactic cytokine receptor 5 (CCR5) gene polymorphism is suspected to be associated with the risk of DKD occurrence; however, the results of the research conducted so far are inconclusive. The aim of this study was to evaluate the CCR5 gene polymorphism (rs1799987, 59029 A/G) association with DKD among patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), who are residents of the Upper Silesia region of Poland. CCR5 gene polymorphism (rs1799987, 59029 A/G) was assessed among consecutive patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treated in a single outpatient diabetology clinic in Upper Silesia, Poland. Its association with DKD was examined. Additionally, selected clinical and demographic data were included in the analysis. Among 467 eligible study patients, there was no association between examined CCR5 gene polymorphism and the presence of DKD in relation both to the American Diabetes Association definition (p = 0.6) and to the National Kidney Foundation definition (p = 0.3) of this complication. The presented study did not confirm the association between the examined gene polymorphism and the risk of DKD; further studies in this area are needed in order to establish or explicitly exclude this association.

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